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Arrancamos la semana y el mes de febrero con mucha información relacionada a DeepSeek y Apple, ademas tenemos la noticia de que OpenAI lanzo un modelo de IA bajo inteligencia profunda; El presidente de Samsung, Jay Y. Lee, fue absuelto de todos los cargos; El nuevo servicio iCloud de Apple, ‘Confetti’ y como todos los días les solicitamos sus comentarios. #Deepseek tomado desde varios puntos de vista https://infosertecla.com/2025/02/01/deepseek-tomado-desde-varios-puntos-de-vista/ El presidente de Samsung, Jay Y. Lee, fue absuelto de todos los cargos https://infosertecla.com/2025/02/03/el-presidente-de-samsung-jay-y-lee-fue-absuelto-de-todos-los-cargos/ Los videos de la semana en nuestras redes https://infosertecla.com/2025/02/03/videos-los-videos-de-la-semana-en-nuestras-redes-112/ ¿Cuáles son los riesgos de seguridad del modelo R1 de DeepSeek? https://infosertecla.com/2025/02/03/ciberseguridad-cuales-son-los-riesgos-de-seguridad-del-modelo-r1-de-deepseek/ ChatGPT Deep Research es el agente de inteligencia artificial que cambia las reglas del juego https://openai.com/index/introducing-deep-research/ DeepSeek, países y agencias que han prohibido la tecnología de la empresa de inteligencia artificial https://techcrunch.com/2025/02/03/deepseek-the-countries-and-agencies-that-have-banned-the-ai-companys-tech/? Cientos de empresas bloquean DeepSeek por los riesgos para los datos de China https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2025-01-30/deepseek-s-ai-restricted-by-hundreds-of-companies-within-days El nuevo servicio iCloud de Apple, ‘Confetti’ https://www.bloomberg.com/news/newsletters/2025-02-02/apple-aapl-ai-and-ar-struggles-show-it-has-lost-some-of-its-product-edge Apple habría cancelado el desarrollo de gafas AR https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2025-01-31/apple-scraps-work-on-mac-connected-augmented-reality-glasses Apple podría estar buscando incorporar DeepSeek a Apple Intelligence https://weibo.com/5821279480/PcqZXAIgc Video del día en las redes https://www.instagram.com/reel/DFmEcKsslQm/ ESPERAMOS TUS COMENTARIOS...
Three news stories summarized & contextualized by analytic journalist Colin Wright.Biden promises aid to California after mudslides and power outagesSummary: An atmospheric river that rolled through California over the past few days has triggered more than 120 mudslides, forced evacuations and rescue missions, and left hundreds of thousands of homes and businesses without power for several days, alongside all the destruction to roads and buildings and other sorts of infrastructure; there are three confirmed deaths so far, and millions of residents remained under flood alerts as of late Tuesday night.Context: This new wave of storms follows another wave a week earlier and though these atmospheric rivers are normal aspects of the water cycle in California, typically providing the area about 50% of the rain it receives in a year, these storms have become more intense in recent years, with 46 atmospheric river events tallied on the US West Coast since last winter, nine of which were categorized as strong, two that were extreme, and one that was exceptional.—The New York TimesOne Sentence News is a reader-supported publication. To support my work, consider becoming a free or paid subscriber.Samsung billionaire acquitted in succession suitSummary: The executive chairman of Samsung, Jay Y. Lee, has been acquitted of stock manipulation charges by a Seoul court, the judge in the case saying there wasn't enough admissible evidence to find him guilty.Context: This is a somewhat surprising ruling, but one that should allow Lee and Samsung to move on from a case that's plagued them since 2015; Lee was convicted on charges of bribery and corruption in a separate case in 2017, and he spent some time in prison, but was ultimately pardoned by the president in 2022; Samsung is a vital business for the South Korean economy, and is enmeshed with much of the larger, global tech industry, which has made the series of corruption-related charges against company leadership in the past few decades incredibly inconvenient for a lot of people, including facets of the South Korean government.—BloombergNayib Bukele reelected as El Salvador president in landslide winSummary: El Salvadoran President Bukele won his reelection bid in a big way, taking somewhere in the neighborhood of 80-85% of the vote.Context: The 42-year-old leader has been controversial, using authoritarian tactics to reshape the government in his image, filling all facets of it with loyalists, while cracking down on gangs in the country in a manner that has alarmed international human rights organizations; at the same time, though, he's become incredibly popular in-country because those gangs were a persistent and pernicious issue, shaping everyday life in El Salvador in a big and negative way; so while he's been called a dictator by some, many locals seem happy with how he's using his allegedly dictatorial powers, which is why, despite the constitution disallowing his reelection, he was able to run and win, and could possibly continue to do so in the future as many times as he pleases.—The GuardianA remarkably large chunk of all of China's GDP and investment growth in 2023 came from renewable energy industry products and services like solar, battery storage, and electric vehicles.—CarbonBrief98%Estimated data center GPU (graphics processing unit) market share claimed by Nvidia, according to research conducted by Wells Fargo and shared by a Microsoft employee.GPUs have traditionally been used for video production, high-end video games, and crypto-mining, but have in recent years been adapted for general computing purposes and for AI-oriented tasks, making them increasingly vital and allowing entities like Nvidia (which has long focused on GPUs) to elbow-aside other market behemoths like Intel, which were slower to enter this sub-industry.—ExtremeTechTrust Click Get full access to One Sentence News at onesentencenews.substack.com/subscribe
Elon Musk ya es dueño de Twitter / Estallido de Covid en la mayor fábrica de iPhones / Un buscador de CDs olvidados / Telegram lanza los mensajes de pago / Solo VW eléctricos a partir de 2033
En el Top Tecnología de hoy te contamos los detalles del caso de Jay Y. Lee, quien recibió un indulto de Corea del Sur. También todo sobre las nuevas funciones de Google y Meet y una reseña de los nuevos dispositivos de la familia Galaxy. Si quieres saber más sobre estas noticias entra a Expansión.mx/tecnologia y síguenos en nuestras redes @ExpansionMx, @Gin_jabbab, @Guarolf y @Eresinaeresina.
Disney+ sube sus precios, implantan córneas de colágeno de cerdo y Xiaomi presenta el CyberOne.Puedes apoyar la realización de este programa con una suscripción. Más información por acáNoticias: -Un grupo de investigadores suecos reportó resultados exitosos en implantes de córneas hechas con colágeno de piel de cerdo.-Xiaomi presentó varios dispositivos nuevos, desde celulares plegables hasta lavadoras, pero la gran sorpresa fue la introducción de CyberOne: un robot humanoide. -El investigador de privacidad, Feliz Krause, reportó que los navegadores integrados en las aplicaciones de iOS de Facebook e Instagram inyectan código javascript para el Pixel de Meta.-El presidente de Corea del Sur, Yoon Suk Yeol, otorgó al vicepresidente de Samsung Electronics, Jay Y Lee, un indulto por los cargos de soborno el cual entrará en vigor el 15 de agosto.-Disney reportó que su plataforma Disney+ agregó 14.4 millones de suscriptores para llegar a un total de 152.1 millones en su tercer trimestre, superando las estimaciones de analistas. -Discusión: ¿Es Disney el nuevo rey del streaming? Our GDPR privacy policy was updated on August 8, 2022. Visit acast.com/privacy for more information. Become a member at https://plus.acast.com/s/noticias-de-tecnologia-express.
AMONG the headlines for Friday, August 12, 2022, Bank Negara Malaysia earlier today said, the nation's payment systems remain secure despite a potential data breach announced by payment gateway service provider iPay88 (M) Sdn. Bhd. According to the central bank, forensic investigations are still ongoing. In a statement, Bank Negara said the breach originated from and is confined to iPay88's payment card systems and does not involve vulnerabilities in the banks' systems. Also, South Korea's Ministry of Justice said, Samsung Electronics vice chairman Jay Y. Lee will receive a presidential pardon on Monday. The pardon will erase Jay's criminal record from his 2017 conviction, paving the way for the heir to the country's biggest company to regain power at the top. The special pardon will enable him to officially participate in management, restoring his right to work at the giant tech company. Listen to the top stories of the day, reporting from Astro AWANI newsroom — all in 3-minutes. We bring you the headlines, weekdays at 5 pm. Stay informed on astroawani.com for these news and more.
Samsung Electronics vice chairman Jay Y. Lee is back in prison following a retrial of his 2017 conviction in a bribery case that helped lead to the downfall of former South Korean president Park Guen-hye. The Seoul High Court sentenced Lee to 30 months on Monday. Lee was originally convicted of bribery in 2017 and […]
China’s economic recovery gathers speed with Q4 growth beating expectations at 6.5 per cent. President-elect Joe Biden pledges to immediately repeal President Trump’s climate policies as Washington DC braces for potential violence ahead of Wednesday’s inauguration. In Germany, Armin Laschet wins the vote to become the new chairman of the CDU party and is now the frontrunner to take over from Angela Merkel as Chancellor. Samsung shares slide in Korea on the news that de facto leader vice chairman Jay Y. Lee is to serve a two-and-a-half year sentence for bribery and corruption. And in M&A news, French waste management giant Suez has received a potential takeover proposal from Ardian-GIP following an offer from its principal rival Veolia.
Stai ascoltando un estratto gratuito di Ninja PRO, la selezione quotidiana di notizie per i professionisti del digital business. Con Ninja PRO puoi avere ogni giorno marketing insight, social media update, tech news, business events e una selezione di articoli di approfondimento dagli esperti della Redazione Ninja. Vai su www.ninja.it/ninjapro per abbonarti al servizio.Samsung senza una guida. Il leader de facto della compagnia, Jay Y. Lee, è tornato in prigione con una nuova condanna per corruzione, gettando il conglomerato sudcoreano nel caos in un momento chiave per l’industry legato alla ripresa dopo la pandemia. Il gigante della tecnologia si trova così senza un capo al timone per la seconda volta in quattro anni.La campanella è suonata per Stellantis. Ieri il debutto brillante del nuovo gruppo automobilistico alla Borsa di Milano (+7,5 %) e a Parigi (+8). Oggi l’esordio a Wall Strett, ieri chiusa per il Martin Luther King Day. Il “cartello dei libri” su Amazon. Piove una nuova accusa sul gigante eCommerce, che stavolta riguarda il presunto accordo con cinque editori, tra cui HarperCollins e il gruppo Hachette Book. La causa, intentata da uno studio legale statunitense, sostiene che Amazon avrebbe preso accordi con gli editori per soffocare la concorrenza.
El grupo Samsung, el mayor conglomerado empresarial de Corea del Sur, anunció la muerte, a los 78 años, de su presidente, Lee Kun-hee, hombre más rico del país que llevaba ingresado en un hospital de Seúl desde 2014 a causa de un infarto que le dejó incapacitado. Samsung dijo en un comunicado que Lee "falleció el 25 de octubre acompañado por su familia, incluyendo al vicepresidente (del grupo) Jay Y. Lee", conocido como Lee Jae-yong y que, como heredero del imperio que dirigía su padre, ha estado al frente del conglomerado desde que su progenitor quedó postrado en una cama hace más de seis años. --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/estacion-online2/message Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/estacion-online2/support
Patrocinador: Usar un VPN es muy importante y los gratuitos son problemáticos. NordVPN te permite caudal ilimitado, seis dispositivos a la vez y tutti fruti de ventajas a un 68% de descuento entrando en nordvpn.org/mixxio. Nuevos procesadores de Intel / Australiana detenida por post en Facebook / Líder de Samsung a juicio otra vez / Stockfish 12 arrasa / Spotify elimina episodios de Joe Rogan / App Store sube precios en México y Chile Intel anuncia su nueva gama de procesadores portátiles. Tiger Lake viene con un aumento importante de rendimiento, especialmente en mononúcleo y en gráficos integrados gracias a la llegada de Iris Xe. Los detalles técnicos aportados por Intel muestran un rendimiento superior a la nueva gama 4000 de AMD (comparativa). A ver qué tal las pruebas independientes. Repartidores de Amazon dejan móviles colgados de un árbol cerca de los puntos de inicio de la ruta para que el sistema de reparto piensen que están en las inmediaciones y les asigne el transporte a ellos. Este sistema laboral está roto al 100%, y además está siendo explotado por mafias que revenden estos trayectos. Ciudadana australiana arrestada por un post de Facebook en el que incitaba a otros a acudir a una protesta ilegal contra las medidas de cuarentena del estado de Victoria, bajo cargos de atentado contra la salud de otros ciudadanos. Corea del Sur acusa formalmente al líder de Samsung. Jay Y. Lee volverá a sentarse en el banquillo acusado de conspirar para hacerse con mayor control accionarial del Grupo Samsung. Todo esto en espera de que se repita el juicio por los sobornos de 2017, por el que ya fue condenado a cinco años de cárcel. — Su padre, el Presidente del Consejo, lleva 7 años en el hospital sin que nadie realmente sepa nada de su estado de salud. Spotify elimina docenas de episodios polémicos de Joe Rogan. En septiembre comenzaba su etapa como programa exclusivo en Spotify, y los oyentes han visto que han desaparecido unos 50 episodios con invitados polémicos de los últimos años. Si Spotify me da 100 millones de dólares me comprometo a borrar todos los episodios de Kernel que ellos quieran. Tengo principios, pero también quiero una mansión. ♟ El mejor algoritmo de ajedrez tiene una nueva versión. Stockfish 12 ganaría 10 veces más partidas en encuentros simulados frente a su versión anterior (¡de hace ocho meses!). Un salto ELO de 130 (gráfico). Es una locura de avance. Los nuevos Stockfish barre el suelo con AlphaZero de DeepMind (Google), a ver si presentan nueva versión. La App Store subirá precios en México y Chile, un 16 y un 19% respectivamente, para compensar por el aumento de tasas digitales a este tipo de compras. Netflix, Sony y otros ya lo han añadido, y no se sabe muy bien qué ocurrirá con Google Play. Supercomputadores descubren una nueva teoría sobre el coronavirus. Investigadores americanos han analizado 2.500 millones de combinaciones genéticas, y concluido que el virus crea “tormentas de bradicinina”, como nueva hipótesis. Giggl permite navegar por la web con amigos en tiempo real. Funciona creando una sesión (o “portal”) de navegación donde los miembros pueden chatear, mientras todos ven una o varias webs en directo. ¿Quieres colaborar con el programa? Colabora en Patreon Colabora en Ko-Fi (PayPal) ---- Ahora también tenemos un grupo de Telegram para oyentes: https://t.me/joinchat/AF0lVBd8RkeEM4DL-8qYfw ---- Sigue la publicación en: Newsletter diaria: http://newsletter.mixx.io Twitter: http://twitter.com/mixx_io o sigue a Álex directamente en: http://twitter.com/somospostpc Envíame un email: alex@barredo.es Telegram: https://t.me/mixx_io Web: https://mixx.io
Samsung Group’s leader, Jay Y. Lee, appeared before a South Korean court on Monday, awaiting a ruling on whether new allegations including accounting fraud and stock manipulation will send him back to jail after more than two years of freedom. Prosecutors last week asked the court to issue an arrest warrant against Lee, culminating a probe into a controversial 2015 merger of two Samsung affiliates that they said helped facilitate Lee’s plan to assume greater control of the group. The risk of more jail time for Lee who has led the group since his father’s heart attack in 2014, has cast a pall over the conglomerate and its crown jewel, Samsung Electronics Co, whose annual revenue alone is equivalent to 12% of South Korea’s gross domestic product. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
8 de junio de 2020: Un error de software en algunas pantallas de los iPhone 11 El vicepresidente de Samsung, Jay Y. Lee, podría ser detenido hoy por corrupción Xiaomi lanza una nueva pulsera de actividad Sonos lanza su nueva app S2 --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app
Samsung Group heir Jay Y. Lee, involved in a bribery scandal, on Wednesday made a rare apology over controversial succession plans and said he will not hand over management rights to his children at the family-controlled conglomerate. He said during a press conference at the company’s Seoul office that they have failed at times, to meet society’s expectations. Also apologised for not strictly uphold the law and ethical standards,” He also apologised for the behaviour of executives caught sabotaging labour union activities, and vowed to guarantee labour rights at the tech giant. --- This episode is sponsored by · Afrolit Podcast: Hosted by Ekua PM, Afrolit shares the stories of multi-faceted Africans one episode at a time. https://open.spotify.com/show/2nJxiiYRyfMQlDEXXpzlZS?si=mmgODX3NQ-yfQvR0JRH-WA Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/newscast-africa/support
This week on the SyrupCast, Igor Bonifacic, Patrick O'Rourke and Rose Behar are joined by MobileSyrup contributor Ted Kritsonis to talk about the announcements from Mobile World Congress (MWC) and the arrest of Samsung heir, Jay Y. Lee. Over this past week, the SyrupCast team has been keeping a close eye on MWC, covering all the smartphone reveals at the conference. With a plethora of new phones announced from Samsung, Huawei, Nokia, Sony, Blackberry, Motorola and LG, the team ranks their top picks. Samsung is back in the news for more unsavoury business this week, leaving the SyrupCast crew and many people around the world wondering, who will be left to lead the South Korean tech giant? Tune in to hear the SyrupCast team's thoughts and jump in the comments to tell us yours. Hosts: Igor Bonifacic, Patrick O'Rourke, Rose Behar and Ted Kritsonis Total runtime: 41:01 Mobile World Congress: 2:00 Samsung's arrested state: 26:20 Shoutouts: 36:30
Helen Nissenbaum (@HNissenbaum) is on the faculty if Cornell Tech, on leave from NYU where she Professor of Media, Culture and Communication and Director of the Information Law Institute. Her eight books include Obfuscation: A User's Guide for Privacy and Protest, with Finn Brunton (MIT Press, 2015), Values at Play in Digital Games, with Mary Flanagan (MIT Press, 2014), and Privacy in Context: Technology, Policy, and the Integrity of Social Life (Stanford, 2010). Her research has been published in journals of philosophy, politics, law, media studies, information studies, and computer science. Grants from the National Science Foundation, Air Force Office of Scientific Research, and the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services Office of the National Coordinator have supported her work on privacy, trust online, and security, as well as studies of values embodied in design, search engines, digital games, facial recognition technology, and health information systems. Recipient of the 2014 Barwise Prize of the American Philosophical Association, Prof. Nissenbaum has contributed to privacy-enhancing software, including TrackMeNot (for protecting against profiling based on Web search) and AdNauseam (protecting against profiling based on ad clicks). Both are free and freely available. Nissenbaum holds a Ph.D. in philosophy from Stanford University and a B.A. (Hons) from the University of the Witwatersrand. Before joining the faculty at NYU, she served as Associate Director of the Center for Human Values at Princeton University. In this episode, we discussed: the commercial and political contexts that animate policy discussion around privacy. the means by which citizens may use technology to obfuscate their lawful online activity and activism. points of alignment between consumer privacy advocates and the tech sector. policy recommendations. Resources: Cornell Tech NYU Steinhardt Department of Media, Culture and Communication Obfuscation: A User's Guide for Privacy and Protest by Finn Brunton and Helen Nissenbaum (MIT, 2016) The Crooked Timber of Humanity by Isaiah Berlin (Princeton, 2013) Ad Nauseum TrackMeNot NEWS ROUNDUP Republican California Representative David Nunes, who is Chairman of the House Intelligence Committee, which has been investigating Russia's role in the 2016 election, has said he'd like to know why the FBI recorded former national security advisor Michael Flynn's conversations with the Russian ambassador in the first place. He said it was an invasion of Flynn's privacy. Trump forced Flynn to resign two weeks ago, after it was revealed that Flynn misled Vice President Mike Pence about Flynn's contacts with Russian officials days before the election. Trump himself did not inform Pence about Flynn's conversations until at least 2 weeks after Trump knew about them, according to the Washington Post. House Oversight Committee Chairman Jason Chafetz also said his committee had no plans to conduct a further investigation. Mike Debonis has the story in the Washington Post. Politico reports that conservatives worried about leaks from federal employees have asked federal agencies to look into employees' use of the encrypted data app Signal. -- Amidst intense competition from T-Mobile and Sprint which have long offered unlimited data plans, Verizon will now itself offer unlimited data once again. Verizon had stopped offering unlimited data in 2011. -- The Chief of Samsung Group was arrested last week in South Korea. Forty-eight year old Jay Y. Lee, a member of South Korea's richest family, is accused bribing individuals connected with South Korean President Park Geun Hye, who was impeached in December on corruption charges. Hyunjoo Jin and Joyce Lee cover this in Reuters. -- Amid increased cyber warfare, Microsoft President Brad Smith is calling for a "digital Geneva Convention". At the RSA security conference last week, Smith noted “Let's face it, cyberspace is the new battlefield." Smith said the convention should define rules of engagement, such as rules under which nation's would pledge not to disrupt civilian infrastructure. Elizabeth Weise covers this in USA Today. -- Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg published a 5,800 word missive last week in which he took a stand in support of globalization and Facebook's role in it. The wave of nationalism that has swept the Western world has prompted a debate about the merits of globalization. Mike Isaac has the story in The New York Times. -- Snapchat set its valuation between $19.5 and $22 billion ahead of its long-anticipated IPO. In that range, it would be the largest IPO since Alibaba's in 2014. -- At the RSA conference last week, Assistant FBI Director Scott Smith said the federal law enforcement agency will be ramping up its use of predictive policing technology. Smith said, "It's where we are moving, and hope to go when you talk about predicting as opposed to proactive and reactive. Reactive is consistently where we have been, proactive means we're really trying to get ahead of it. But predictive is where we want to be. And that's where I know FBI Cyber Division is strongly moving towards as we speak ..." Catch Chris Bing's full story is in FedScoop. -- Finally, Senator Orrin Hatch--Utah Republican and head of the Republican High Tech Task Force--offered up his tech agenda last week. The agenda targets H1B visa reform and improving cross-border digital trade. Hatch also supports the Electronic Communications Privacy Act, which passed the House earlier this month, which would require law enforcement officials to obtain search warrants for emails. Hatch's plan was praised by tech sector leaders, including Consumer Technology Association president Gary Shapiro. Alexis Kramer has more at Bloomberg BNA.
Samsung’s bad patch continues after a South Korean court on Friday ordered the arrest of Jay Y. Lee, the 48-year-old head of the Samsung Group on charges of Bribery and Embezzlement. Tip TV’s Zak Mir, Presenter Jenny Hammond and Independent Market Analyst Matt Brown discuss whether Samsung is prepared for CEO vacuum and the possible impact on the stock. Other key topic discussed is whether the wheels are coming off from Trump wagon. Markets eagerly await the details of Trump’s fiscal plan. Samsung, Trump Bump, stocks, equities, forex, commodities, macro, US, UK, Korea, trading, investing, technicals
On the news today- South Korea decides whether to arrest Samsung group leader Jay Y. Lee, SpaceX returned to inventing the future, round up on the premier league, India chase down 350 to beat England on the first ODI and DOminoz pizza beats google in total stock returns